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O.19

sole seedling. To the separate trees themselves, I would compare the distinct "personalities" that are found in one person in cases of "multiple personality." Just how far memory, and with it "personality," may depend upon that thing, the fleshly body, by which each of us is brought into active and passive relations with the Universe of singulars one can only guess; but the mind seems to me to be of the nature, not of a singular, but of a general, like the "stock" of a variety of fruit-trees. If the reader objects that a general is a "mere word," I shall, for the moment waive such a reply as that, notwith-

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