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0456 The Heart of a Continent : vol.1
大陸深奥部 : vol.1
The Heart of a Continent : vol.1 / 456 ページ(カラー画像)

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doi: 10.20676/00000247
引用形式選択: Chicago | APA | Harvard | IEEE

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390   THE HEART OF A CONTINENT.   [CHAP.

this, till the whole universe is a whirling vortex of dead worlds ? or are life and heat to come to them again by impact with one another, or in some yet unknown manner ?

Then, in the present, what is happening in these worlds around us ? When I visited the secluded little state of Hunza,

whose inhabitants were shut out by the mountains from contact

with outside peoples and countries, I found they thought that the world only consisted of a few neighbouring valleys, and that

no higher race than themselves existed. They could form no

conception of such vast plains of cultivated land as are seen in India ; they could imagine nothing like the ocean ; a railway and a telegraph would have seemed supernatural to them, and

men who could invent and work such things, as of an altogether superior order to themselves. We men on this earth are in .

as remote a corner of the universe as Hunza is in this world ; and, among the millions of worlds around us, there must be living beings of some sort, and, among them all, may there not, perhaps, be some who are superior to ourselves ? Man is the highest form of living being in this single little world of ours—this little speck, which is to the universe as the smallest grain of sand to the stretch of the seashore. But is he the highest in the whole universe ? Are not the probabilities overwhelmingly in favour of his not being so ? Would it not be the veriest chance, if, among all these millions of worlds, this one on which we live should have happened to develop the highest being ? Thinking on all this, one cannot help believing that, in some few at least of those myriads of worlds, there may be more perfect beings than ourselves. There, there may be beings with the senses more highly developed, who could see, for instance, with the power of our telescopes and microscopes ; beings, again, who had still other senses than we. possess, who might have the power after which we seem to be dimly groping, of reading the thoughts of others, and directly communicating with others at a distance. Or, again, beings whose lives,