Man does not bring to God's altar the stuff of nature in itself, in its initial structure, but something he has made and molded out of nature for the nourishment and the inspiration of men. |
Our consciences are littered like an old attic with the junk of sheer conviction. |
Our consciences are littered like an old attic with the junk of sheer conviction. |
Our consciences are littered like an old attic with the junk of sheer conviction. |
The rational mind of man is a shallow thing, a shore upon a continent of the irrational, wherein thin colonies of reason have settled amid a savage world. |
Within this thin wafer of bread is caught up symbolically the labor of plow and of sowing, of harvest and threshing, of milling, of packing, of transportation, of financing, of selling and packaging. Man's industrial life is all there. |