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holds out an immaculate mirror. to life. He tries to render the impervious pervious by a smooth flow of arguments.
He does not believe in the word 'accident and dives deep into its reason, arriving at the conclusion that 'Every effect hus 'a canne.' He advises all to go on doing good deeds, because the accumulation of good deeds is sure to blaze forth at the proper time. I
He lively endorses the view that the non-acceptance of soal, re-birth and the existence of God, would plunge the world into the bottomless ocean of chaos. In such a state the very lise itself would be stripped of all its pleasures and encircled by the untransgressable sea of dismay and disappointment.
Ultimately, he finishes his prefáce by exhorting the readers to always look up to the sky, i. e. they should pitch their ideals high. The poem 'Andrea Del Sarto' of the well-known poet Browning, compares favourably with this. The painter in this pcem says: