brother returned and saw it, he said to the jester, “You

must pay that man.” Some people try to tend folks, as

if they should steer the regulator of mankind. God makes

us pay for tending the action that He adjusts. [20]

The regulator is governed by the principle that makes

the machinery work rightly; and because it is thus gov-

erned, the folly of tending it is no mere jest. The divine

Principle carries on His harmony.

Now turn from the metaphor of the mill to the Mother's [25]

four thousand children, most of whom, at about three