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Ecclesiastes, Chapter 12:
1-7 "Remember now thy
Creator in the days of thy youth, The lesson here conveyed:
Think who made you and for what purpose you were made. Reflect, that a
sentient being, you were molded by the hand of God and to him made
responsible for the proper use of the faculties with which you have been
endowed, for the proper employment of the years, and the acceptance of the
opportunities offered during the period of active, vigorous manhood. "While the evil day
come not, nor the years draw nigh, The grievance of old age,
the days of sorrow, the years of pain, when the natural decay of the
faculties brings the "ills that flesh is heir to" and ushers in the
years of mental and physical decrepitude, when there is no longer any
pleasure in life. "While the Sun, or
the light, or the Moon, And as the Ecclesiastic
continues the imagery, picturing the abiding and increasing infirmities of
age, defer not the duties of life to intend accomplishment. "In the days when the
keepers of the house shall tremble, When the hands and arms
that guard and protect this tenement of clay are palsied with old age and we
are no longer firm and erect. "And the grinders
cease because they are few, The teeth now few in
number and the eyes which are the windows through which the soul of man looks
out are now curtained by the shadow of declining years. The ears lose their
activities in old age. "When the sound of
the grinders is low, The pressing of food upon
the toothless gums; The soundness of slumber no longer his, the old man
sleeps lightly and rises from restless couch at the crowing of the cock at
dawn; The daughters of music are the organs of speech. "Also, when they
shall be afraid of that which is high, When the dizziness of old
age prevents the mounting to high places; The silver hair of old age; no
longer able to sustain the lightest weight and sensual desire no longer
occurs. "Because man goeth to
his long home, That undiscovered country
from whose bourne no traveler returns; "Or even the silver
chord be loosed, The golden bowl, the head,
the silver chord, the spinal column which supports it. Golden and Silver
denote the preciousness of man's life and nature. The wheel the heart, the
pitcher the great vessels which pour blood into the arterial system. "Then shall the dust
return to the earth as it was, |

