*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.
Review final details at checkout.
₹780
₹821
4% OFF
Paperback
All inclusive*
Qty:
1
About The Book
Description
Author
<p>This book is sent out to induce people to look at their own eyes to pick up the gold in their laps to study anatomy under the tutorship of their own hearts. One could accumulate great wisdom and secure fortunes by studying his own finger-nails. This lesson seems the very easiest to learn and for that reason is the most difficult.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>People are thinking but they can think much more. The housewife is thinking about the chemical changes caused by heat in meats vegetables and liquids.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>The sailor thinks about the gold in sea-water the soldier thinks of smokeless powder and muffled guns; the puddler meditates on iron squeezers and electric furnaces; the farmer admires Luther Burbank's magical combinations in plant life; the school-girl examines the composition of her pencil and analyses the writing-paper; the teacher studies psychology at first hand; the preacher understands more of the life that now is; the merchant and manufacturer give more attention to the demand.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>Yes we are all thinking. But we are still thinking too far away; even the prism through which we see the stars is near the eyes. The dentist is thinking too much about other people's teeth. This book is sent out to induce people to look at their own eyes to pick up the gold in their laps to study anatomy under the tutorship of their own hearts. One could accumulate great wisdom and secure fortunes by studying his own finger-nails.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>This lesson seems the very easiest to learn and for that reason is the most difficult. The lecture The Silver Crown which the author has been giving in various forms for fifty years is herein printed from a stenographic report of one address on this general subject. It will not be found all together as a lecture for this book is an attempt to give further suggestion on the many different ways in which the subject has been treated just as the lecture has varied in its illustrations from time to time.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>The lecture was addressed to the ear. This truth which amplifies the lecture is addressed to the eye. I have been greatly assisted and sometimes superseded in the preparation of these pages by Prof. James F. Willis of Philadelphia. Bless him! My hope is by this means to reach a larger audience even than that which has heard some of the things herein so many times in the last forty-five years.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>We do not hope to give or sell anything to the reader. He has enough already. But many starve with bread in their mouths. They spit it out and weep for food. Humans are a strange collection. But they can be induced to think much more accurately and far more efficiently. This book is sent out as an aid to closer observation and more efficient living.</p><p>&nbsp;</p>