The Food of the Gods and How It Came to Earth


google search for The Food of the Gods and How It Came to Earth

Return to Master Book Index.

Page
177 178 179 180 181

Quick Jump
1 90 179 269 358

And men took such happenings into their lives, and met them by the  
expedients of the moment, and told one another there was "no change in  
the essential order of things." After the first great panic, Caterham,  
in spite of his power of eloquence, became a secondary figure in the  
political world, remained in men's minds as the exponent of an extreme  
view.  
Only slowly did he win a way towards a central position in affairs.  
"
There was no change in the essential order of things,"--that eminent  
leader of modern thought, Doctor Winkles, was very clear upon this,--and  
the exponents of what was called in those days Progressive Liberalism  
grew quite sentimental upon the essential insincerity of their progress.  
Their dreams, it would appear, ran wholly on little nations, little  
languages, little households, each self-supported on its little farm. A  
fashion for the small and neat set in. To be big was to be "vulgar," and  
dainty, neat, mignon, miniature, "minutely perfect," became the  
key-words of critical approval....  
Meanwhile, quietly, taking their time as children must, the children of  
the Food, growing into a world that changed to receive them, gathered  
strength and stature and knowledge, became individual and purposeful,  
rose slowly towards the dimensions of their destiny. Presently they  
seemed a natural part of the world; all these stirrings of bigness  
seemed a natural part of the world, and men wondered how things had been  
before their time. There came to men's ears stories of things the giant  
179  


Page
177 178 179 180 181

Quick Jump
1 90 179 269 358