The great question of all questions 
at the present time is this: 
Taking for granted that the known 
and the knowable are bounded on both 
sides by the unknowable and the infinitely unknown, 
why struggle for that infinite unknown? 
Why shall we not be content with the known? 
Why shall we not rest satisfied with eating, 
drinking and doing a little good to society? 
This idea is in the air. 
From the most learned professor 
to the prattling baby, we are told 
to do good to the world, that is all of religion, 
and that it is useless to trouble ourselves about 
questions of the beyond. 
So much is this the case 
that it has become a truism.
But fortunately we must 
inquire into the beyond. 
This present, this expressed, 
is only one part of that unexpressed. 
The sense universe is, 
as it were, only one portion, 
one bit of that infinite spiritual 
universe projected into the plane 
of sense consciousness. 
How can this little bit 
of projection be explained, 
be understood, without knowing that which is beyond?
