There was one peculiarity about Mizora
that I noticed soon after my arrival, but for various
reasons have refrained from speaking of before now.
It was the absence of houses devoted to religious worship.
In architecture Mizora displayed the
highest perfection. Their colleges, art galleries,
public libraries, opera houses, and all their public
buildings were grand and beautiful. Never in any
country, had I beheld such splendor in design and
execution. Their superior skill in this respect,
led me to believe that their temples of worship must
be on a scale of magnificence beyond all my conceiving.
I was eager to behold them. I looked often upon
my first journeyings about their cities to discover
them, but whenever I noticed an unusually imposing
building, and asked what it was, it was always something
else. I was frequently on the point of asking
them to conduct me to some church that resembled my
own in worship, (for I was brought up in strict compliance
with the creeds, dogmas, and regulations of the Russo
Greek Church) but I refrained, hoping that in time,
I should be introduced to their religious ceremonies.
When time passed on, and no invitation
was extended me, and I saw no house nor preparation
for religious worship, nor even heard mention of any,
I asked Wauna for an explanation. She appeared
not to comprehend me, and I asked the question:
“Where do you perform your religious
rites and ceremonies?”
She looked at me with surprise.
“You ask me such strange questions
that sometimes I am tempted to believe you a relic
of ancient mythology that has drifted down the centuries
and landed on our civilized shores, or else have been
gifted with a marvelous prolongation of life, and
have emerged upon us from some cavern where you have
lived, or slept for ages in unchanged possession of
your ancient superstition.”
“Have you, then,” I asked
in astonishment, “no religious temples devoted
to worship?”
“Oh, yes, we have temples where
we worship daily. Do you see that building?”
nodding toward the majestic granite walls of the National
College. “That is one of our most renowned
temples, where the highest and the noblest in the
land meet and mingle familiarly with the humblest
in daily worship.”
“I understand all that you wish
to imply by that,” I replied. “But
have you no building devoted to divine worship; no
temple that belongs specially to your Deity; to the
Being that created you, and to whom you owe eternal
gratitude and homage?”
“We have;” she answered
grandly, with a majestic wave of her hand, and in
that mellow, musical voice that was sweeter than the
chanting of birds, she exclaimed:
“This vast cathedral,
boundless as our wonder;
Whose shining
lamps yon brilliant mists supply;
Its choir the winds,
and waves; its organ thunder;
Its dome
the sky.”
“Do you worship Nature?” I asked.
“If we did, we should worship ourselves, for
we are a part of Nature.”
“But do you not recognize an
invisible and incomprehensible Being that created
you, and who will give your spirit an abode of eternal
bliss, or consign it to eternal torments according
as you have glorified and served him?”
“I am an atom of Nature;”
said Wauna, gravely. “If you want me to
answer your superstitious notions of religion, I will,
in one sentence, explain, that the only religious
idea in Mizora is: Nature is God, and God is
Nature. She is the Great Mother who gathers the
centuries in her arms, and rocks their children into
eternal sleep upon her bosom.”
“But how,” I asked in
bewildered astonishment, “how can you think of
living without creeds, and confessionals? How
can you prosper without prayer? How can you be
upright, and honest, and true to yourselves and your
friends without praying for divine grace and strength
to sustain you? How can you be noble, and keep
from envying your neighbors, without a prayer for
divine grace to assist you to resist such temptation?”
“Oh, daughter of the dark ages,”
said Wauna, sadly, “turn to the benevolent and
ever-willing Science. She is the goddess who has
led us out of ignorance and superstition; out of degradation
and disease, and every other wretchedness that superstitious,
degraded humanity has known. She has lifted us
above the low and the little, the narrow and mean
in human thought and action, and has placed us in a
broad, free, independent, noble, useful and grandly
happy life.”
“You have been favored by divine
grace,” I reiterated, “although you refuse
to acknowledge it.”
She smiled compassionately as she answered:
“She is the divinity who never
turned a deaf ear to earnest and persistent effort
in a sensible direction. But prayers to her must
be work, resolute and conscientious work.
She teaches that success in this world can only come
to those who work for it. In your superstitious
belief you pray for benefits you have never earned,
possibly do not deserve, but expect to get simply
because you pray for them. Science never betrays
such partiality. The favors she bestows are conferred
only upon the industrious.”
“And you deny absolutely the
efficacy of prayer?” I asked.
“If I could obtain anything
by prayer alone, I would pray that my inventive faculty
should be enlarged so that I might conceive and construct
an air-ship that could cleave its way through that
chaos of winds that is formed when two storms meet
from opposite directions. It would rend to atoms
one of our present make. But prayer will never
produce an improved air-ship. We must dig into
science for it. Our ancestors did not pray for
us to become a race of symmetrically-shaped and universally
healthy people, and expect that to effect a result.
They went to work on scientific principles to root
out disease and crime and want and wretchedness, and
every degrading and retarding influence.”
“Prayer never saved one of my
ancestors from premature death,” she continued,
with a resolution that seemed determined to tear from
my mind every fabric of faith in the consolations
of divine interposition that had been a special part
of my education, and had become rooted into my nature.
“Disease, when it fastened upon the vitals of
the young and beautiful and dearly-loved was stronger
and more powerful than all the agonized prayers that
could be poured from breaking hearts. But science,
when solicited by careful study and experiment and
investigation, offered the remedy. And now,
we defy disease and have no fear of death until our
natural time comes, and then it will be the
welcome rest that the worn-out body meets with gratitude.”
“But when you die,” I
exclaimed, “do you not believe you have an after
life?”
“When I die,” replied
Wauna, “my body will return to the elements from
whence it came. Thought will return to the force
which gave it. The power of the brain is the
one mystery that surrounds life. We know that
the brain is a mechanical structure and acted upon
by force; but how to analyze that force is still beyond
our reach. You see that huge engine? We
made it. It is a fine piece of mechanism.
We know what it was made to do. We turn on the
motive power, and it moves at the rate of a mile a
minute if we desire it. Why should it move?
Why might it not stand still? You say because
of a law of nature that under the circumstances compels
it to move. Our brain is like that engine a
wonderful piece of mechanism, and when the blood drives
it, it displays the effects of force which we call
Thought. We can see the engine move and we know
what law of nature it obeys in moving. But the
brain is a more mysterious structure, for the force
which compels it to action we cannot analyze.
The superstitious ancients called this mystery the
soul.”
“And do you discard that belief?”
I asked, trembling and excited to hear such sacrilegious
talk from youth so beautiful and pure.
“What our future is to be after
dissolution no one knows,” replied Wauna, with
the greatest calmness and unconcern. “A
thousand theories and systems of religion have risen
and fallen in the history of the human family, and
become the superstitions of the past. The elements
that compose this body may construct the delicate beauty
of a flower, or the green robe that covers the bosom
of Mother Earth, but we cannot know.”
“But that beautiful belief in
a soul,” I cried, in real anguish, “How
can you discard it? How sever the hope that after
death, we are again united to part no more? Those
who have left us in the spring time of life, the bloom
on their young cheeks suddenly paled by the cold touch
of death, stand waiting to welcome us to an endless
reunion.”
“Alas, for your anguish, my
friend,” said Wauna, with pityng tenderness.
“Centuries ago my people passed through
that season of mental pain. That beautiful visionary
idea of a soul must fade, as youth and beauty fade,
never to return; for Nature nowhere teaches the existence
of such a thing. It was a belief born of that
agony of longing for happiness without alloy, which
the children of earth in the long-ago ages hoped for,
but never knew. Their lot was so barren of beauty
and happiness, and the desire for it is, now and always
has been, a strong trait of human character.
The conditions of society in those earlier ages rendered
it impossible to enjoy this life perfectly, and hope
and longing pictured an imaginary one for an imaginary
part of the body called the Soul. Progress and
civilization have brought to us the ideal heaven of
the ancients, and we receive from Nature no evidence
of any other.”
“But I do believe there is another,”
I declared. “And we ought to be prepared
for it.”
Wauna smiled. “What better
preparation could you desire, then, than good works
in this?” she asked.
“You should pray, and do penance
for your sins,” was my reply.
“Then,” said Wauna, “we
are doing the wisest penance every day. We are
studying, investigating, experimenting in order that
those who come after us may be happier than we.
Every day Science is yielding us some new knowledge
that will make living in the future still easier than
now.”
“I cannot conceive,” I
said, “how you are to be improved upon.”
“When we manufacture fruit and
vegetables from the elements, can you not perceive
how much is to be gained? Old age and death will
come later, and the labor of cultivation will be done
away. Such an advantage will not be enjoyed during
my lifetime. But we will labor to effect it for
future generations.”
“Your whole aim in life, then,
is to work for the future of your race, instead of
the eternal welfare of your own soul?” I questioned,
in surprise.
“If Nature,” said Wauna,
“has provided us a future life, if that mysterious
something that we call Thought is to be clothed in
an etherealized body, and live in a world where decay
is unknown, I have no fear of my reception there.
Live this life usefully and nobly, and no matter
if a prayer has never crossed your lips your happiness
will be assured. A just and kind action will
help you farther on the road to heaven than all the
prayers that you can utter, and all the pains and
sufferings that you can inflict upon the flesh, for
it will be that much added to the happiness of this
world. The grandest epitaph that could be written
is engraved upon a tombstone in yonder cemetery.
The subject was one of the pioneers of progress in
a long-ago century, when progress fought its way with
difficulty through ignorance and superstition.
She suffered through life for the boldness of her
opinions, and two centuries after, when they had become
popular, a monument was erected to her memory, and
has been preserved through thousands of years as a
motto for humanity. The epitaph is simply this:
’The world is better for her having lived in
it.’”