16

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G16

humble, he must already have learned that just as no hue and
no pitch of sound is excellent except in its relations and significance,
so nothing can be rightly judged but by the Eye that takes in all.
Yet he must have dimly discerned that two things are good: that
man should endure, and that man should struggle; and that
consequently it must be one of the perfections of the world
that there is pain for man to endure, and another that there is
evil that he ought to struggle against. Such thoughts will
suggest to the man the kind of predictions that he can deduce

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