improved, will be the work of time and science. Realized at last it will serve as a solid basis for individual, family, and social morality. Healthy youth fit for action; prolonged, adult age, the symbol of strength; normal old age, wise in council, these would have their natural places in harmonious society. "Great actions," said one of old, "are not achieved by exertions of strength, or speed, or agility, but rather by the prudence, the authority, and the judgment which are found in a higher degree in old age." The old age of which Cicero here speaks is the ideal old age, regular and normal, and not the premature, deformed, incapable and egoistic old age which results from a pathological condition. At the end of this full life, the old man being full of days, will crave for the eternal sleep and will resign himself to it with joy. . . .
Death, then, "the last enemy that shall be destroyed," to use the expression of St. Paul, will yield to the power of science. Instead of being "the king of terrors," it will become after a long and healthy life, after a life exempt from morbid accidents, a natural and longed for event, a satisfied need. Then will be realized the wish of the fabulist:—
"I should like to leave life at this age, just as one leaves a banquet, thanking the host, and departing."
Has this physiological solution of the problem of
death the virtue attributed to it by Metchnikoff?
Is it as optimistic as he thinks it is? The instinct
of death supervening at the end of a normal and
well-filled cycle will no doubt facilitate to the aged
their departure on the great voyage. The wrench