"I cannot deny," said Claude, "that such things as presentiments may be possible. However miraculous they may seem, are they so very much more so than the daily fact of memory? I can as little guess why we remember the past, as why we may not at times be able to foresee the future." . . . Two Years Ago, chap. xxviii. A thing need not be unreasonable -- that is, contrary to reason -- because it is above and beyond reason, or, at least, our human reason, which at best (as St. Paul says) sees as in a glass darkly. MS. Letter. 1856. |