86 Mind and Matter night-gown was not so well pinned on and, instead of being full of steady wind like the others, kept blowing up and down as though she were preaching wildly. We stood and laughed for ten minutes. The housewife came to the window and wondered at us, but we could not resist the pleasure of watch- ing the absurdly life-like gestures which the night-gowns made. I should like a Santa Famiglia with clothes drying in the background. A love story might be told in a series of sketches of the clothes of two families hanging out to dry in adjacent gardens. Then a gentleman's night-shirt from one garden, and a lady's night-gown from the other should be shown hanging in a third garden by themselves. By and by there should be added a little night-shirt. A philosopher might be tempted, on seeing the little night-shirt, to suppose that the big night-shirts had made it. What we do is much the same, for the body of a baby is not much more made by the two old babies, after whose pattern it has cut itself out, than the little night-shirt is made by the big ones. The thing that makes either the little night-shirt or the little baby is something about which we know nothing whatever at all. Our Organism Man is a walking tool-box, manufactory, workshop and bazaar worked from behind the scenes by someone or some- thing that we never see. We are so used to never seeing more than the tools, and these work so smoothly, that we call them the workman himself, making much the same mistake as though we should call the saw the carpenter. The only workman of whom we know anything at all is the one that runs ourselves and even this is not perceivable by any of our gross palpable senses. The senses seem to be the link between mind and matter— never forgetting that we can never have either mind or matter pure and without alloy of the other. Beer and My Cat Spilt beer or water seems sometimes almost human in its uncertainty whether or no it is worth while to get ever such