The Sea Lions eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 610 pages of information about The Sea Lions.

The Sea Lions eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 610 pages of information about The Sea Lions.

THE SEA LIONS;

or, The Lost Sealers.

By J. Fenimore Cooper.

  Daughter of Faith, awake, arise, illume
  The dread unknown, the chaos of the tomb
  Melt, and dispel, ye spectre doubts that roll
  Cimmerian darkness o’er the parting soul

  Campbell.

Complete in One Volume.

1860.

Preface.

If any thing connected with the hardness of the human heart could surprise us, it surely would be the indifference with which men live on, engrossed by their worldly objects, amid the sublime natural phenomena that so eloquently and unceasingly speak to their imaginations, affections, and judgments.  So completely is the existence of the individual concentrated in self, and so regardless does he get to be of all without that contracted circle, that it does not probably happen to one man in ten, that his thoughts are drawn aside from this intense study of his own immediate wants, wishes, and plans, even once in the twenty-four hours, to contemplate the majesty, mercy, truth, and justice, of the Divine Being that has set him, as an atom, amid the myriads of the hosts of heaven and earth.

The physical marvels of the universe produce little more reflection than the profoundest moral truths.  A million of eyes shall pass over the firmament, on a cloudless night, and not a hundred minds shall be filled with a proper sense of the power of the dread Being that created all that is there—­not a hundred hearts glow with the adoration that such an appeal to the senses and understanding ought naturally to produce.  This indifference, in a great measure, comes of familiarity; the things that we so constantly have before us, becoming as a part of the air we breathe, and as little regarded.

One of the consequences of this disposition to disregard the Almighty Hand, as it is so plainly visible in all around us, is that of substituting our own powers in its stead.  In this period of the world, in enlightened countries, and in the absence of direct idolatry, few men are so hardy as to deny the existence and might of a Supreme Being; but, this fact admitted, how few really feel that profound reverence for him that the nature of our relations justly demands!  It is the want of a due sense of humility, and a sad misconception of what we are, and for what we were created, that misleads us in the due estimate of our own insignificance, as Compared with the majesty of God.

Very few men attain enough of human knowledge to be fully aware how much remains to be learned, and of that which they never can hope to acquire.  We hear a great deal of god-like minds, and of the far-reaching faculties we possess; and it may all be worthy of our eulogiums, until we compare ourselves in these, as in other particulars, with Him who produced them.  Then, indeed, the utter insignificance of our means becomes too apparent to admit of a cavil.  We

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The Sea Lions from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.