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O..2

that we shall find some sound reason to believe in Him that is open to every human mind, high and low. Now if such reason there be, it is for the reader to judge whether there is any other that it can be than the "Neglected argument" herein to be described. Yet notwithstanding the persuasiveness of this train of thought,—a persuasiveness no less than extraordinary,—I know of but one or two theologians among the many who scrape together all the reasons they can possibly find or invent for believing in God, who mention this "neglected argument"; and those few mention it but very briefly; since it can be unknown to none of them, candour puts me to the chagrin of confessing that even in those eyes in which every grain of affirmative argument sparkles gold, the neglected argument appears as base metal.

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