D: Ibid.

Now, what is this evidence of the heart, which is sufficiently cogent and valid to counterpoise that of the mind; and which gives to "faith," or "hope," a firm foothold in the very face of the opposing "resistless" testimony of knowledge?

Within our experience, to which the poet knows we are entirely confined, there is a fact, the significance of which we have not as yet examined. For, plain and irresistible as is the evidence of evil, so plain and constant is man's recognition of it as evil, and his desire to annul it. If man's mind is made to acknowledge evil, his moral nature is made so as to revolt against it.

"Man's heart is made to judge

Pain deserved nowhere by the common flesh

Our birth-right—bad and good deserve alike

No pain, to human apprehension."A

A: Mihrab ShahFerishtah's Fancies.

Owing to the limitation of our intelligence, we cannot deny but that