356 Death both for end and endlessness of both good and ill, but as torture they are the merest mockery when compared with the fruitless chase to which poor Death has been condemned for ever and ever. Does it not seem as though he too must have committed some crime for which his sentence is to be for ever grasping after that which becomes non-existent the moment he grasps it ? But then I suppose it would be with him as with the rest of the tortured, he must either die himself, which he has not done, or become used to it and enjoy the frightening as much as the killing. Any pain through which a man can live at all becomes unfelt as soon as it becomes habi- tual. Pain consists not in that which is now endured but in the strong memory of something better that is still recent. And so, happiness lies in the memory of a recent worse and the expectation of a better that is to come soon. Ignorance of Death I The fear of death is instinctive because in so many past generations we have feared it. But how did we come to know what death is so that we should fear it ? The answer is that we do not know what death is and that this is why we fear it. ii If a man know not life which he hath seen how shall he know death which he hath not seen ? iii If a man has sent his teeth and his hair and perhaps two or three limbs to the grave before him, the presumption should be that, as he knows nothing further of these when they have once left him, so will he know nothing of the rest of him when it too is dead. The whole may surely be argued from the parts. iv To write about death is to write about that of which we have had little practical experience. We can write about con- scious life, but we have no consciousness of the deaths we daily die. Besides, we cannot eat our cake and have it. We