ACTION AND REACTION 37 Wherever we go, be it in train or carriage, we may leave a thought which another picks up, we leave in this way an influence which affects others. Thus pain caused to another by thought or act means suffering to ourselves sooner or later, and happiness spread means happiness flowing back to ourselves. This does away with all injustice, and is not, as some would say, severe or stern, but a just and natural law, "And to Thee, 0 Lord, belongeth mercy; for Thou renderest to every man according to his work." Man has free-will to sow what seed he will, but having sown he must not complain or be surprised that the harvest will show what he has sown. Gradually, very gradually, and very slowly we learn therefore what to sow. What he desires in the future he must sow now. fi Do men gather grapes of thorn or figs of thistles ? " If you want grapes, you must not sow a fig tree. It is no use to sow oats and expect to gather wheat at the harvest. We must sow in one life that which we desire to reap in the next. The difficulty here comes in that we do not discriminate what we want to reap, and sow broadcast not thinking of the tares and weeds that will face us in the next life. For just when we have begun to discriminate the real from the