Cobwebs from an Empty Skull by Ambrose Bierce
page 117 of 251 (46%)
page 117 of 251 (46%)
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CXXXII. Some of the lower animals held a convention to settle for ever the unspeakably important question, What is Life? "Life," squeaked the poet, blinking and folding his filmy wings, "is--." His kind having been already very numerously heard from upon the subject, he was choked off. "Life," said the scientist, in a voice smothered by the earth he was throwing up into small hills, "is the harmonious action of heterogeneous but related faculties, operating in accordance with certain natural laws." "Ah!" chattered the lover, "but that thawt of thing is vewy gweat blith in the thothiety of one'th thweetheart." And curling his tail about a branch, he swung himself heavenward and had a spasm. "It is _vita_!" grunted the sententious scholar, pausing in his mastication of a Chaldaic root. "It is a thistle," brayed the warrior: "very nice thing to take!" "Life, my friends," croaked the philosopher from his hollow tree, dropping the lids over his cattish eyes, "is a disease. We are all symptoms." "Pooh!" ejaculated the physician, uncoiling and springing his rattle. |
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