[Autobiography of Andrew Carnegie by Andrew Carnegie]@TWC D-Link book
Autobiography of Andrew Carnegie

CHAPTER XIV
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When the circle has been completed, you feel on your return that you have seen (of course only in the mass) all there is to be seen.

The parts fit into one symmetrical whole and you see humanity wherever it is placed working out a destiny tending to one definite end.
The world traveler who gives careful study to the bibles of the various religions of the East will be well repaid.

The conclusion reached will be that the inhabitants of each country consider their own religion the best of all.

They rejoice that their lot has been cast where it is, and are disposed to pity the less fortunate condemned to live beyond their sacred limits.

The masses of all nations are usually happy, each mass certain that: "East or West Home is best." Two illustrations of this from our "Round the World" trip may be noted: Visiting the tapioca workers in the woods near Singapore, we found them busily engaged, the children running about stark naked, the parents clothed in the usual loose rags.


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