"No; besides I want you to get me some papers out of that drawer in my desk."
Dorian fetched a large bundle of clippings and papers and asked if they were what he wanted.
"Not all of them just now; but take from the pile the few on top. I want you to read them to me. They are a few selections which I have culled and which have a bearing on the things we have lately been talking about."
The first note which Dorian read was as follows. "'The keys of the holy priesthood unlock the door of knowledge to let you look into the palace of truth'."
"That's by Brigham Young. You did not know that he was a poet as well as a prophet," commented the old man. "The next one is from him also."
"'There never was a time when there were not Gods and worlds, and when men were not passing through the same ordeals that we are now passing through. That course has been from all eternity and it is and will be to all eternity'."
"Now you know, Dorian, where I get my inspiration from. Read the next, also from President Young."
"'The idea that the religion of Christ is one thing, and science is another, is a mistaken idea, for there is no true science without religion. The fountain of knowledge dwells with God, and He dispenses it to His children as He pleases, and as they are prepared to receive it; consequently, it swallows up and circumscribes all'."
"Take these, Dorian; have them with you as inspirational mottoes for your life's work. Go on, there are a few more."
Dorian read again: "'The region of true religion and the region of a completer science are one.'—Oliver Lodge."