* VOL 2. SILVERTON. OREGON, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1897. For the Torch of Reason. For larger bounty tn at he should have owned. W ere the red beacon light of danger burns Along a pathway where some one mav fare, The darkest night should find our readv hand To warn him ere the boundary be p a -t; There is no help th a t bears such help­ lessness As th at which reaches out to rescue him Who sinks in sight of harbor-lights and hom e; The life-line that we throw should circle all, And gird the world with love’s circum ­ ference ! t A ixjnzo L. R ic k . Ray's Crossing, Ind. NO. 8. hygiene, laboring to secure the The Fall of flan . foundation of mental energy by the 8 o many gods, so many creeds, BY EDGAR C. BE A L L. preservation of physical vigor and So many paths that wind and wind, V* hile just the art o f being kind to banish diseases bv Is all the sad world needs. •r the removal If Adam was created perfect he — [Kila Wheeler W ilcox. of their causes. They will seek t< The human heart in dark, mysterious circumscrilx the power of prejudice could not have sinned, because * ways by the extension of knowledge. none but an imperfect nature can Must worship som ething; always seek­ ing aid They will obviate the perils of pov­ sympathize with wrong. If he was From distant sources, leaving daily paths erty by lessons of industry and morally perfect at all, his perfection Where many walk with lame and bleed­ ing feet, prudence. Their doctrines will must have consisted in the suprem­ Or sit with lips too dum b to plead their dispense with miracles; they will acy of his moral faculties, and in a woe, Or faint beneath their burdens; know­ make experience the test of truth, necessary incapacity to yield the ing not and justice the test of integrity; reins of government to the lower One man can be another’6 savior here; That we need never [>ear in lands remote, they will not suppress, but en­ propensities. And if his moral fac­ A perilous enterprise to render aid, courage, free inquiry; their war ulties had been supreme, his high­ For by our gateways famished hands Reform. reach out. against error will employ no est pleasure would have been in acting according to their dictates. weapons but those of logic. We do not need some supernatural dawn, Nor sound of mighty trum p, to know we M hen the harbinger of day dis­ The religion of reason will limit It is, therefore, unreasonable to be- walk li< ve that such a man was ever On holy ground; no pilgrimage we need pels the specters of darkness, half- its proper sphere to the Secular To view the shining fields where peace awakened sleepers often mourn the welfare of mankind, but will ask as created perfect, and that, notwith­ is found, standing his perfect moral powers, For like an angel clothed in spotless fading visions of dreamland, as well as grant, the fullest freedom white, they would mourn the memories <>f' of metaphysical speculation. Why he allowed the lower nature to She walks attendant in our common a vanished world, till they find should tl»e friends of light darken overcome the higher. ways. I he idea of a perfect moral na­ We daily pass her in the paths of men that the solid earth still remains, the sunshine of earth w ith fanatical * ’ * heed eed f her not, as we our search And with its mountains and forests, and wars for the suppression of private me necessarily implies a complete pursue And or saints crowned with fair aureoles of that the enjoyment of real life has theories about the mystery of the moral restraining power. ■ » » light! just begun. With a similar regret u ii revealed first cause? Why where this moral restraint is per- The Aztec temple with its gilded gold, the dupes of Jesuitism mourn the should they rage about the riddle ect, no amount of temptation The Luca shrine with its mysterious rites. The babe's sweet cry that by the Ganges collapse of their creed and lament of the veiled hereafter to please the would be capable of overruling it. stream the decline of morality, till they ordainerof the eternal law that Such a mind would he as incapable Went out in darkness, or where bps find that religion still remaips, ’’sits such inexorable penulli»*H up­ of vice as Nero was incapable of grew pale Beneath the Jag h eru au t’s broad, grind­ w ith its consolation and hopes, and on the neglect of the present world? virtue. Imagine Nero being irre­ ing wheels, But tell how human hearts have sought that the true work of redemption Should the friends of common sistibly tempted to a life of purity! to find has but just begun. sense quarrel about guesses at the Cculd anything he more absurd? One star, and blotted out the noonday The reign of superstition begins solution of unknowable secrets? And yet it is surely no more incon­ sun. sistent than to imagine a perfect This life we have, and bounded by a to yield to a religion of reason and We need not grudge cur wonder- sleep. humanity. The first forerunners loving brother the luxury of medi­ man and woman being induced to What lies within our ante-natal clime steal. We long to know, and what succeeds our of that religion appeared at the end tating on the mysteries of the un­ day. If it is objected that in a perfect of the sixteenth century, when the seen or the possibilities of ressurrec- Astrologers have sought to fashion out From starry signs the fate decreed to philosophers of northern Europe tion. Shall the soul of the dying mental organization, the lower fac­ m an : first dared to appeal from dogma to patriarch live only in his children? ulties would he subject to the same The heavens keep th eir secrets w ell; the nature, and since that revival of Shall it wing its way to distant temptations as in any other combi­ winds Return fresh from the great wide world ; common-sense the prison walls of stars? Shall it linger on earth: nation, I answer that from the very The clouds float on their far discursive clerical obscurantism have been “ Sigh in the breeze, keep silence in nature of the case the greater the way; And, from the sea. no knowledge does shaken by shock after shock, til, appeal to do wrong, the greater the eave, theie come. And glide with airy loot o’er yonder would be the offense to the moral The questions th at we daily ask, receive daylight now enters through a sea?” At nightfall, only em pty echoes hack. sentiments; an J as in a perfect su­ thousamd fissures. Why should we wrangle about ’ Fis ours to live so that, the world may Fie But Secularism has a positive as riddles which we cannot possibly premacy of the moral forces, all The le our daily ruins of superstition. Communi­ should not engross the time needed lower faculties, thus entirely pre­ speech, And carved not in the cold unfeeling ties of reformants will intrust the for the problems of the only world venting the lower propensities from stone: ever obtaining the consent of the work of education to chosen teach­ thus far revealed. Too long delayed, the marble dove that ers, w ho will combine the functions wings Thus, founded on a basis of moral faculties to indulge in a crim- ts sculptured flight, bears no sweet of an instructor with those of an health-culture, reason and- justice, inal desire. Take, for example, a messages language» of the oflice of prie8thood wil, regain highly cultivated and refined ladv, Beyond the barriers set by time and fate ! exhorter. In the ''h e n lips are dust they will not need »everal European nations the word . ¡,8 ancient preBtigC( and tlie t(eHt with large benevolence, conscien­ the kiss Tuat might have lieen the sesame in “rector” still bears the significance. and wi8e8t of men wj|| bccome tiousness, etc., and with small de­ doubt, and acquisitiveness. The ministers of Secularism will ministers of Secularism by devoting, structiveness . *;• widen out the paths to peace and light. * ,° of f such 9Ueh a person [>er8