fall,   howling dismally    the while,  in  their   frantic efforts to  fly his presence.   He  is
Frankenstein's  monster,    yearning    for love    and fellowship  with    his kind,   longing
to  feel    the hand    of  a   friend  in  his,    and yet knowing,    by  the unmistakable    signs
which    a   sight   of  him     causes,     that    he  is  indescribably   repulsive   to  the     people
among   whom    he  lives.  Add to  all this    that    he  is  cut off from    all the things  which,
to  educated    Europeans,  make    life    lovely, and you will    realise that    his is  indeed  a
sorry    case.   The     privations  of  the     body,   if  he  has     sufficient  grit    to  justify     his
existence,  count   for little. He  can live    on  any kind    of  food,   sleep   on  the hardest
of  hard    mats,   or  on  the bare    ground, with    his head    and feet    in  a   puddle, if  needs
must.   He  can turn    night   into    day,    and sleep   through the sunlight,   or  sleep   not at
all,    as  the case    may be, if  any useful  purpose is  to  be  served  thereby.    These   are
not things  to  trouble him,    though  the fleshpots   of  Egypt   are very    good    when    duty
allows   him     to  turn    his     back    for     a   space   upon    the     desert.     Privations  all     these
things  are called  in  ordinary    parlance,   but they    are of  little  moment, and are good
for his liver.  The real    privations  are of  quite   another sort.   He  never   hears   music;
never    sees    a   lovely  picture;    never   joins   in  the     talk    and     listens     lovingly    to
conversation    which   strikes the answering   sparks  from    his sodden  brain.  Above
all,    he  never   encounters  the softening   influence   of  the society of  ladies  of  his
own  race.   His     few     books   are     for     a   while   his     companions,     but     he  reads   them
through and through,    and cons    them    o'er    and o'er,   till    the best    sayings of  the best
authors ring    flat    on  his sated   ears    like    the echo    of  a   twice-told  tale.   He  has not
yet learned that    there   is  a   great   and marvellous  book    lying   beneath his hand,   a
book    in  which   all may read    if  they    find    but the means   of  opening the clasp   which
locks   it, a   book    in  which   a   man may read    for years   and never   know    satiety,
which,  though  older   than    the hills,  is  ever    new,    and which,  though  studied for a
lifetime,    is  never   exhausted,  and     is  never   completely  understood.     This
knowledge    comes   later;  and     it  is  then    that    the     Chapter     of  the     Great   Book    of
Human   Nature, which   deals   with    natives,    engrosses   his attention   and,    touching
the grayness    of  his life,   like    the rising  sun,    turns   it  into    gold    and purple.
Many     other   things  he  has     to  endure.     Educated    white   men     have    inherited   an
infinite    capacity    for feeling bored;  and a   hot climate,    which   fries   us  all over    a
slow     fire,   grills  boredom     into    irritability.   The     study   of  oriental    human   nature
requires    endless patience;   and this    is  the hardest virtue  for a   young,  energetic
white   man,    with    the irritable   brain   of  his race,   to  acquire.    Without it  life    is  a
misery—for
It  is  not good    for the Christian's health
To  hurry   the Aryan   brown,