R. O. Gunther has produced the fifth and final volume of his saga, The Life and Times of Charles. We say the final volume due to the fact that age must be taken into consideration-the ravages of time, you know.
Nevertheless, we find our author at this time very much content due to his five-volume accomplishment. What has he accomplished? He has artfully discerned and separated the world's real reality existence from a false sense of reality existence, which obscures and overpowers the real. The existent fictitious reality is that government, religion, and commerce can forge lasting peace and bring security; when in fact, these very entities have made the world the insecure and terrifying place it is. The populous, helpless is left with the alternative to seek seclusion, hiding deep in one's own personal affairs-someone somehow will surely make everything better. This masquerade situation the author calls the false sense of reality-a superficial reality.