Page:Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures (1898).djvu/450

430 The Judge asks if, by doing good to his neighbor, it is

possible for anybody to become diseased, transgress the laws, and merit punishment; and Governor Mortality replies in the affirmative.

Another witness takes the stand, and testifies:—

The testimony for the plaintiff, Personal Sense, being closed, Judge Medicine arises, and with great solemnity

addresses the jury of Mortal Minds. He analyzes the offence, reviews the testimony, and explains the law relating to liver-complaint; the conclusion of which is, that laws of nature render disease homicidal. In compliance with a stern duty, his honor, Judge Medicine, urges the jury not to allow their judgment to be warped by the irrational, unchristian suggestions of Christian Science. They must regard, in such cases, only the evidence of Personal Sense against Mortal Man.

As the Judge proceeds, the prisoner grows restless. His sallow face blanches with fear, and a look of despair and death settles upon it. The case is given to the jury. A brief consultation ensues; and the jury returns a verdict of “Guilty of liver-complaint in the first degree.”