Page:Henry Northcote (IA henrynorthcote00snairich).pdf/88

 is the chief enemy against which rational common sense has to contend."

"Then in your view the greatest enemy of the human race of which history has taken cognizance is Jesus Christ?"

"I will not say the greatest; but He shares the opprobrium that attaches to His class. It was that type of abnormalism which developed the religious sense in man; and any sense more calculated to provoke infinite misery, any sense more completely out of harmony with the facts of existence, one cannot conceive."

"In a word, excess of any kind is repugnant to the average person?"

"One would say so; mainly, I think, because it extorts such heavy toll of all who are brought in contact with it."

"Then elevation of feeling, profundity of thought, subtlety of insight, austerity of morals, heroism, beauty, in short, the superlative in any guise whatever, should be eliminated from the republic of the average sensual person?"

"If the average sensual person could contrive a republic for himself, that would be its first decree."

"Hence his hostility to those abnormal egotisms which are known as 'greatness'?"

"As far as the average person can see, that appears to go down to the root of the matter."

"Well, sir," said the young advocate, "permit me to take a slight parable out of my own experience to refute this supposition."

"Pray do so."

The advocate selected as a preliminary a second